Chromcraft Revington, Inc. (NYSE MKT: CRC) announced today that, on
April 5, 2013, its board of directors concluded that voluntarily
delisting the Company’s common stock from the NYSE MKT and voluntarily
deregistering from the reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, as amended (“Exchange Act”), are in the best interests of
the Company. The Company is eligible to deregister its stock because it
has fewer than 300 stockholders of record.

Accordingly, the Company intends to file on April 18, 2013 a Form 25
with the NYSE MKT and the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”)
to voluntarily delist its common stock from the NYSE MKT and to
deregister the Company's common stock from Section 12(b) of the Exchange
Act. The Company also intends to file on April 29, 2013 a Form 15 with
the SEC to suspend the Company’s reporting obligations under Section
15(d) of the Exchange Act. Immediately upon the filing of Form 15, the
Company will no longer be obligated to file certain Exchange Act reports
with the SEC. Following delisting and deregistering, the Company
presently intends to provide quarterly and annual information regarding
its performance through postings to its website and press releases.

It is expected that delisting will take effect on April 29, 2013, and at
that time the Company’s shares will no longer be traded on the NYSE MKT.

Although the Company has not been notified by NYSE MKT, the Company
believes that it may no longer be in compliance with certain NYSE MKT
minimum continued listing standards.

The Company’s board of directors determined, after careful
consideration, that voluntarily delisting and deregistering is in the
overall best interests of the Company. The following factors were
considered, in addition to others, by the board of directors in taking
this action:

the cost savings that may be realized by the Company as a result of
the elimination of its obligation to file reports with the SEC;

avoidance of costs which are required in order to comply with the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and the rules and regulations promulgated
by the SEC thereunder; and

the benefit of reallocating personnel to devote greater attention to
the Company's business strategies.

Ronald H. Butler, the Company’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
commented, “These actions are designed to reduce our operating costs.
The consequences of remaining an SEC-reporting company, which includes
significant costs and management time associated with regulatory
compliance, outweighed the current benefits of being a NYSE MKT listed
company.”

Chromcraft Revington® businesses design, manufacture and import
residential and commercial furniture marketed primarily in the U.S. The
Company wholesales its residential furniture products under Chromcraft®,
Cochrane®, Peters-Revington®, and CR Kids & Beyond® primary brands. It
sells commercial furniture under the Chromcraft® and Executive Office
Concepts brands. The Company sources furniture from overseas suppliers,
with domestic contract specialty facilities, and operates a U.S.
manufacturing facility for its commercial furniture and motion based
casual dining furniture in Mississippi and a manufacturing facility for
office suites and other commercial furniture lines in California.

Certain information and statements contained in this news release are
forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements can be
generally identified as such because they include future tense or dates,
are not historical or current facts, or include words such as “believe,”
“may,” “expect,” “intend,” “plan,” “anticipate,” or words of similar
import. Forward-looking statements express management’s current
expectations or forecasts of future events or outcomes, but are not
guarantees of performance or outcomes and are subject to certain risks
and uncertainties that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ
materially from those in such statements.

Among such risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results or
outcomes to differ materially from those identified in the
forward-looking statements are the impact of the current economic
difficulties in the United States and elsewhere; import and domestic
competition in the furniture industry; our ability to execute our
business strategies; our ability to grow sales and reduce expenses to
eliminate our operating losses; the recent slowdown in the U.S. office
furniture market will continue; pressure to reduce deficit spending at
various governmental entities that directly or indirectly purchase our
products; our ability to sell the right product mix; our inability to
raise prices in response to increasing costs; continued credit
availability under our current credit facility and our ability to fully
utilize the credit facility; our ability to raise additional financing,
if needed; our ability to anticipate or respond to changes in the tastes
or needs of our end users in a timely manner; supply disruptions with
products manufactured in China, Vietnam and other Asian countries;
market interest rates; consumer confidence levels; cyclical nature of
the furniture industry; consumer and business spending; changes in
relationships with customers; customer acceptance of existing and new
products; new home and existing home sales; financial viability of our
customers and their ability to continue or increase product orders; loss
of key management; other factors that generally affect business; and
certain risks set forth in the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 2011.

The Company does not undertake any obligation to update or revise
publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect information, events
or circumstances after the date of such statements or to reflect the
occurrence of anticipated or unanticipated events or circumstances.